THE NEW YORKER YUL BRYNNER in RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN S lbf KiÐfJ aud I A New Musical Play with CONSTANCE CARPENTER ST. JAMES THEATRE, West 44 St. Evenings at 8:25: $7.20 to 1.80. Matinees Wednesday & Saturday at 2 :25: $4.20 to 1.80. MONDAY EVES. ONLY: CURTAIN AT 7 SHARP MARTHA WRIGHT GEORGE BRITTON in S wi cific with MYRON WILLIAM MARTIN Me CORMICK · TABBERT · WOLFSON and JUANITA HALL MAJESTIC THEATRE, West 44 Sf. Eves at 8:30: $6.00 to 1.80. Wed. Mat. at 2:30: $3.60 to 1.20. Sat. Mat. $4.20 to 1.20. MONDAY EVES. ONLY: CURTAIN AT 7 SH RP :oa: ,.0."--=-=": ..-: : . f_ lJ ::Yß= Edward Duryea Dowling presents ' B **An Evening With .' . EATRICE LILLIE** ::it ..,i,h Reginald Gardiner ' iI1 ;; "<'i< : "THE BEST PLAY OF THE SEASON" -WARD MOREHOUSE, World.Tele & Sun lllLIAN HELLMAN'S The Childrens Hour PATRICIA NEAL · KIM HUNTER IRIS MANN CORONET, West 49th St., Evgs. 8:40. Mats. Wed. & Sat. CINe: ,AM}\ CINe }\M,A · M Þ-. "Movie goers are urged to rush to the I Broadway to see it." . . . Guernsey, New York Herald-Tribune I I I I I I r-RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL-:t Rockefeller Center LANA TURNER · KIRK DOUGLAS WALTER PIDGEON · DICK POWELL liTHE BAD AND THE BEAUTIFULIJ An M-G-M Picture plus SPECTACULAR STAGE PRESENTATION CIN The film with a new dimension Reserved Seats Only Tickets on sale for next 6 weeks at box office. Excrtmg enter tainment for 2 hrs Daily at 2:30 and 8:40. Sat. and Sun at 2, 5, and 8:40. Mats. Mon. through Thur., $1.50, $1.20, 90e. Mats. Fri., Sat., Sun., $2.40, $1 80, $1.20 Eves. $2.80, $2.30, $1.80 $1.20. Sat. midnight show. Mall orders only next 6 mo. encl. self-addressed stamped envelope, give 2 or more all. dates. BROADWAY THEATRE 53rd Street & Broadway CO 5-5711-2-3 hIS desk and, at every click of the type- writer's keys, would rouse thelnselves v?ith a groan and beg hIm to have pity. Once, he had six stories in a single issue of a magazine, each story signed with a different nalne. At the peak of what he terlns his pre-literary period, he was juggling a total of sixteen pseu- donyms, alnong them Georges Siln, Jean du Perry, Christian Brulls, Georges Martin-Georges, Poum et Zette, and Gom Gut. (These pseudo- nyms play hob with collectors of Sim- enon first editions. Some collectors, con- vinced that Georges Simenon is merely another pen name for Georges Sim, would rather invest in old Sims than new Simenons.) Many of his novels were Westerns, for which the French had, and have, an insatiable appetite., They bore such titles as "The Black Panther" and "The Eye of Utah." Others were ad ven ture stories laid in } faraway places-"The King of the Pacific," "The San Francisco China- lnan," "The White Monster of Tierra del Fuego." The rest were what are k . F " I " nown In rance as romans ga ants. Simenon recently took pains to hit on an exact translation of this phrase, as applied to his work. "'Spicy stories' would do," he said, "hut' juicy' is better. Truly, they were more juicy than spicy." Notable among his juicy stories were "Fever," "Forbidden to Love," "Lily's Luck," and-in French as in English-"Miss Baby." "It was the hot twenties, and I made those novels as hot as I could," Simenon says, with a craftsman's honest pride. "Solne of them were il1ustrated, and oh, what f h .,. , " a waste 0 t e artIst s tIme. Simenon had earlier acquired an eIghteen-foot boat, whIch he kept moored in the Seine. Now he com- missioned the building of a stout thirt,- six-foot sloop, the Ostrogoth. He cruised in her through most of the canals of France, Belgiuln, and Holland, as well as in the Mediterranean and the At- lantic, and for two years never spent a night ashore. It was during this period that he received one of his few official honors-a post as private literary con- "ultant to His Highness the PrInce of \10naco. He found writing even easier aboard the Ostrogoth than it had been in the Place des Vosges. For one thing, he had fewer guests to step over on his way to work. For another, every day's travel brought hiln fresh material. One Ostrogoth novel, "The Dancer of the Gai-Moulin," was cOlnposed in ex- actly twenty-five hours. Simenon's fans are certain that this is the world's record for speed in the novel; all Simenon know is that it is his record and that 43 N .L Q('" ' .J.\: :.I e e THE MOST FAMOUS DRY SHERRY IN THE WORLD 1 1 -t "\I 'b I ''''J-.Þ .\( (Þ'...." "b. l ø.. .lJ .It.,. Just say UT. O. Peppy." Extremely dry, clean, fresh and delicate . . . the ideal a peri tif. GONZALEZ BYASS Y CA Browne VIntners Company, Inc., N. Y. Sote Distrilntt01's in the U. S. A. JAMAICA, B.W.I. Fine house for rent in Jamaica, B.W.I. DinIng porch and terrace overlooking Montego Bay-in Reading, 15 minutes from the beach Available by month ($825 monthly) or season 5 bedrooms, 3 baths. Rent includes house- keeper and yard man. 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